310 



GLEANINGS IN BEE CULTURE. 



Apr. 1 



QUEENS, QUEENS 



Old Standbys.— The A. I. Root Co., to whom we 

 have sold queens for many years, wrote us last May, 

 inus : "Are you running low on queens? We hope 

 not, as you seem to be our standbys. Send us 24 pel 

 week instead of 12, till further orders." 



Beat Any Thing He ever Saw.— The Cyprian queens 

 you sent me last year beat any thing I ever saw rear- 

 mg brood and filling their hives with honey.— J Niel- 

 sen, Huntington, Utah, Sept. 4, 1901. 



Is Great.— The nucleus you sent me last fall is great 

 —the finest queen that ever crossed the plains. 

 Please duplicate her this time. Mr. Jordan savs the 

 nucleus you sent him cast two fine swarms.— G. R. 

 Warren, FruitvaU, Cal., May 12, 1901. 



$50 Queens.— My nice queen that vou sent me, and 

 I put in a hive with a handful of bee's on the 6th day 

 of la.st June, has now nearly filled her30-lb. super foi 

 the third time. No man's $50.00 bill could take her. 

 Please send me another one like her as soon as possi- 

 ble, and keep a dozen ready for me like her for the 

 20th of April next, and I will make you a nice present. 

 — M. Brown, Station A, I^ittle Rock, Ark. 



We breed Italians, Cvprians, Holvlands, Carniolans, 

 and Albinos, m separate yards, 5 to 20 miles apart. 

 Prompt service. Safe arrival guaranteed. Bees by 

 the pount, nucleus, full colony, or by the carload. 



Prices : Tested, $1.50 each ; $S.OO for six ; $15.00 pet 

 dozen. Untested, Februarj', March, April, May tl OC 

 each; $5.00 for si.x: ; $9.00 per dozen. Fine breeders, 

 $5.00 each. Send for our catalog, free by mail; tells 

 how to rear queens and how to keep bees for profit. 



Agents for Dadant's Foundation and Gleanings. 

 Premiums given. Don't fail to get our printed matter. 

 It's Alyl, free. Bee-supplies of all kinds. 



The Jennie Atchley Co., Beeville, Tex. 



♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦^ 



♦ \ 



INOW S' e^l 



j «^ Ready ! | 



♦ Sixty-four Page Catalog 



of every thing bee-keepers need. 

 Illustrated and fully described. 

 Especially valuable to begin- 

 ners for the information it con- 

 tains. Send your address on a 

 postal and get it now. Estab- 

 lished 1884. 



J> M* Jenkins^ 



X Wetumpka^ Elmore Co., Ala, x 

 ♦»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦»»»♦»♦ 



^)miii>i^)t*\iMH\i^wmmi^immii^^ 









BEE-SUPPLI 



Best-equipped factory in the West ; car- 

 ry a large stock and greatest v.iriety of 

 • very thing needed in the apiary, assur- 

 ing BEST goods at the LOWEST prices, 

 ;ind prompt shipment. We want every 

 bee-keeper to have our FREE ILLUS- 

 TRATP:d CATALOG, and read descrip- 

 tion of Alternating Hives, Ferguson Su- 

 pers, etc. IVt He at once Jot a catalog. 



AGENCIES 



I Kretchmer Mfg. Co., Box 60, Red Oak, la. 



Trester Supply Company, Lincoln, Neb. 



Shugart & Ouren, Council Bluffs, la. 



Chas. Spangler, Kentland, Ind. 



BINGHAM SMOKER. 



Dear Sir:— Inclosed find $1.75. Please 

 send one brass smoke-engine. I have 

 one already. It is the best smoker I 

 ererused. Trulv yours, 



Henky Schmidt, Hutto, Tex. 



MADE TO ORDER 



Bin gham Brass Smokers. 



Made of sheet brass, which does not rust or burn out; should last 

 a lifetime. You need one, but they cost 25 cts. more than tin of the 

 same size. The little open cut shows our brass hinge put on the 

 three larger sizes. No wonder Bingham's four-inch smoke-engine 

 goes without puffing, and does not drop inky drops. The perforat- 

 ed steel fire-grate has 381 holes to air the fuel and support the fire. 

 Heavy tin smoke-engine, 4-inch stove, per mail, $1.50; 354-inch, 

 $1.10; 3-inch, $1.00; 254-inch, 90c; 2-inch, (i.5c. Bingham smokers are 

 the originals, and have all the improvements, and have been the 

 standard of excellence for 23 years. Only three larger ones brass. 



T. F. Bingham, FarweBI, Michigan. 



